Ghost Machine (company)
Ghost Machine is an American cooperative media company founded in October 2023, which publishes creator-owned comics through Image Comics, and was founded to help the participating creators to benefit from the development of its intellectual properties. The company was announced on October 12, 2023 at the New York Comic Con. Its founding writers and artists, who are exclusive to the company, are Brad Meltzer, Jason Fabok, Gary Frank, Bryan Hitch, Geoff Johns, Francis Manapul, Peter J. Tomasi, Lamont Magee, and Maytal Zchut.[2][1]
Status | Active |
---|---|
Founded | October 12, 2023[1] |
Country of origin | United States |
Distribution | Image Comics |
Key people |
|
Publication types | The Unnamed Rook: Exodus Geiger Junkyard Joe The Rocketfellers |
Fiction genres | |
Official website | Official website |
At its launch, the creators stressed that unlike the work they had done in the past for publishers such as DC Comics, the books of the four shared universes established by the company's first official release in January 2024, Ghost Machine #1, would not be set in the superhero genre,[3] but in other genres such as science fiction, historical fantasy, post-apocalyptic fiction, and horror.[4]
History
Ghost Machine was founded in 2023 as a cooperative media company that would publish creator-owned comics through Image Comics. Its launch was announced on October 12, 2023 at the New York Comic Con[2][1] at the Lunar retailer breakfast, with its first convention panel held on October 13.[5] It also produced a Ghost Machine #1 ashcan comic, as a giveway to visitors to the company's booth.[4][5]
The company's founding writers and artists are: Brad Meltzer, Jason Fabok, Gary Frank, Bryan Hitch, Geoff Johns, Lamont Magee, Francis Manapul, Peter J. Tomasi and Maytal Zchut. It was also indicated that other creators would be joining the company after they completed their prior commitments to other publishers.[1] Ghost Machine was conceived with the idea that its founding creators would be exclusive to the company and will jointly own, operate and profit from their creations. Novelist/television writer Brad Meltzer explained the rationale for the company, pointing to how in the American comics history, historically, writers and artists were not able to control or earn consierable profit from creations that went on to become highly lucrative for publishers, like Superman, saying, "The entertainment industry is an ecosystem, and it is ever changing...When you tell the stories of comics themselves, the creator doesn't always come first."[1]
Pointing to the 2023 Writer's Guild and SAG-AFTRA strikes (the latter of which was still ongoing at the time of Ghost Machine's launch), the company further explained in a press release:[6]
"As the recent Hollywood strikes have shown, creatives are disenfranchised with the traditional industry model – creators seek increased empowerment as a natural progression to an ever-changing entertainment landscape. Ghost Machine's enterprising business model is at the forefront of this evolution with the characters and full company ownership shared by its creators in every way."[6]
"Our ambition for Ghost Machine is to push beyond superheroes, introducing new genres, characters and shared universes, completely co-owned by all the creators involved. We see this as the future of how creatives will work and retain creative control and meaningfully participate in success like never before. Our passion is for the magic of graphic storytelling and the emotional resonance of compelling characters. But we are not just a comic book company – we are the first wholly creator-owned and operated media company of its kind, born out of a desire to create and succeed together."[7]
This was interpreted by Russ Burlingame of ComicBook.com to mean that Ghost Machine would not be restricting to publishing screen-friendly intellectual properties, but a media company that would facilitate development of those properties into media adaptations, and Burligame noted that several of the company's founding creators had experience producing work for film and television. It was not clear, however, whether all of the founders would have an equal stake in all of the properties, or if each individual creator owned their individual properties, which had been the standard arrangement at Image Comics since its founding.[7]
The company's founders stressed that they would be creating stories set in genres outside the superhero genre in which many of them had already done work, with Johns saying, "We want to create beyond superheroes." Echoing this, Hitch said of the stories, "Heroes yes. Capes no."[3] The company's launch schedule was to commence withGeiger: Ground Zero, a two-issue series by Johns and Frank released in November 2023 that serves as a prequel to their 2021 miniseries of the same name. This would be followed in January 2024 with the company's first "official" release,[5] Ghost Machine #1, a 64-page special, and then that April with a series of books that would comprise "four shared universes of character-centered titles."[2][8] The Unnamed, whose first ongoing titles would be Geiger andRedcoat; Rook: Exodus, a sprawling science fiction epic set in the future; Family Odysseys, which centers upon a family of time travelers;[2] and an as-yet untitled horror-based universe co-created by what the company indicated at its launch was a prominent artist[8] still under contract with another publisher,[5] and whose identity would be announced at a later date.[8] Bleeding Cool reported that the name of that series was The Soulless.[4]
Shared universes and titles
The Unnamed
The Unnamed universe centers upon "a mysterious group of heroes across history",[5] including the continuing adventures of Geoff Johns and Gary Frank's previous creations, Geiger and Junkyard Joe.[9] Its titles include:
- Geiger: Ground Zero — a two-issue series by Johns and Frank that serves as a prequel to their 2021 miniseries of the same name,[8] Set 25 years in the future, the book centers upon a man named Tariq Geiger living in a post-nuclear world that folowed the Unknown War,[4][6] who lost his family and his humanity in the courese of that event, when he was tranformed into the Glowing Man, a being who can absorb radiation but struggles to contain it.[4]
- Ghost Machine #1 — a 64-page special published in January 2024 as the company's first official book, which will serve as a primer that will introduce the characters of the company's four shared universes[1][5]
- Geiger — An ongoing series by Johns and Frank that will follow the prequel miniseries[8][2]
- Junkyard Joe — This series by Johns and Frank[8] centers upon a young soldier and cartoonist-to-be named Morrie "Muddy" Davis, who in 1972, during the Vietnam War, encounters a unexplainable, deadly but loyal robot soldier. After the Army convinces him that what he saw was not real, Muddy creates a popular Sunday strip called Junkyard Joe, and decades later, encounters the robot again, who is fleeing those who wish to turn him back into a weapon of war.[4]
- Redcoat — This series by Johns and artist Bryan Hitch centers upon a soldier named Simon Pure who, during the American Revolution,[4][8] is forced to fight for Britain, and who inadvertently gains the power of immortality after stumbling upon the Founding Fathers' secret mystical organization.[4] Described by Hitch as "a bit of a tool",[3] Simon grows jaded over the decades, he becomes an irreverent mercenary who makes his living while fleeing from a litany of deadly enemies, ex-lovers, and bill collectors.[4]
- First Ghost — A supernatural story written by Brad Meltzer that is set in the White House[6][8]
Rook: Exodus
Rook: Exodus — This series by Johns and Jason Fabok is described by Ghost Machine as a "sprawling sci-fi epic which takes place in the far future, on a world where every aspect of nature is controlled by humanity".[8] The story centers upon a struggling farmer who must deal with problems that include winged scavengers who plague his crops. The farmer is given a second chance when he becomes one of the "Wardens", for which he takes on the name Rook, and must decide whether to flee the planet before its destruction or fight to save it.[4] A conceit of the book's premise is the helmet donned by the farmer whose face resembles that of a bird, and gives him the ability to "connect" with birds, which he can employ as his spies and as a weapon.[3]
Family Odysseys
The Rocketfellers — The Family Odysseys universe centers around The Rocketfellers, which is written by Peter J. Tomasi and drawn by Francis Manapul.[6][9] The series' premise is based on the idea that Manapul explains thus: "The best place to hide when you're in the Witness Protection Program perhaps is through a different time."[3] The story depicts a 26th century dysfunctional family who when threatened, flee by traveling through time to the year 2024, where they to encounter the strange inhabitants and culture of that era, only to find that the threat they thought they had escaped has followed them.[4]
Horror universe
The Soulless — This universe was co-created by what Ghost Machine indicated at the 2023 New York Comic Con launch was a prominent artist who was under contract with another publisher,[5] and whose identity would be announced at a later date.[8] The name of this universe was yet to be announced at the company's launch,[3] though the name of the central book was reported by Bleeding Cool on the day of the company's New York Comic Con launch announcement.[4]
References
- Gustines, George Gene (October 12, 2023). "A Comic Book Upstart Seeks to Shake Up the Industry". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on October 14, 2023. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
- "NYCC 2023: Ghost Machine Launches A Cooperative Media Company". Graphic Policy. October 16, 2023. Archived from the original on October 19, 2023. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
- "Welcome to Ghost Machine". Ghost Machine Productions. October 11, 2023. Archived from the original on October 21, 2023. Retrieved October 21, 2023 – via YouTube.
- Johnston, Rich (October 12, 2023). "Johns, Hitch, Frank, Fabok, Tomasi, Meltzer & Manapul's Ghost Machine". Bleeding Cool. Archived from the original on October 21, 2023. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
- Marsden, Megan (October 12, 2023). "NYCC '23: GHOST MACHINE announces comic printing partnership with Image Comics". Comics Beat. Archived from the original on October 21, 2023. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
- Connelly, Eileen A.J. (October 12, 2023). "Comic Book Artists, Writers Launch Creator-Owned Media Company 'Ghost Machine'". TheWrap. Archived from the original on October 14, 2023. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
- Burlingame, Russ (October 13, 2023). "Geoff Johns, Gary Frank, and More Comic Creators Launch New Ghost Machine Imprint". ComicBook.com. Archived from the original on October 19, 2023. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
- Dominguez, Noah (October 13, 2023). "Ghost Machine: Geoff Johns, Gary Frank and More Launch New Image Comics Imprint". SuperHero Hype. Archived from the original on October 19, 2023. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
- Cronin, Brian (October 12, 2023). "NYCC: Johns, Meltzer, Frank, Hitch and More Form New Creator-Owned Company, Ghost Machine". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on October 19, 2023. Retrieved October 21, 2023.
External links
- Official website
- "Ghost Machine, First-Of-Its-Kind Creator-Owned And Cooperative Media Company Launches At New York Comic Con". Image Comics. October 12, 2023. Archived from the original on October 19, 2023.